U.S.A.A.F
Original title: U.S.A.A.F. - United States Army Air Force
Alternative title: The Daylight Bombing of Nazi Europe by U.S.A.A.F. - United States Army Air Force
Platform: Commodore 64
Gametype: Undefined
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Description

U.S.A.A.F. is a detailed day by day simulation of the daylight strategic bombing offensive against the Third Reich and Nazi Europe during WWII. The action is broken down into daily decisions and raids with results so specific that every single serviceable aircraft is accounted for at the beginning and end of every mission. You can play a full length campaign game starting on August 1, 1943 or 3 shorter 1 month campaigns. You can either play as the American Commander of the 8th Air Force in England and the 15th Air Force in Italy bombing primary and secondary targets of 12 different types spread over 91 cities. As the German Commander of the Luftwaffe on the defensive you direct your planes for interception. Victory in the game is determined by several factors including aircraft loss ratios but is mainly based on the Axis Industrial Damage Level (AIDL).There are 5 levels of play for up to 2 people.

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Description from the packaging:

As dawn's first rays streak across the sky, the dull drone of bomb-laden B-24 Liberators fills the air. The beauty of the morning offers the pilots no peace; for they know that all too soon, this serenity will shatter amidst flak bursts and the blaze of enemy fighter fire. Resolutely, they prepare to run the gauntlet.

Destination: Nazi Europe.
"Bomb the devils around the clock," vowed U.S. Brigadier General Ira Eaker. For that vital objective, USAAF committed its forces to complement the British nighttime bombing of Germany. Daring what even the rakehell RAF had deemed impossible, intrepid American pilots braved the daytime skies over Germany. The risk- naked exposure to enemy ground guns and planes. The reward- better visibility for precision bombing.

Now, USAAF lets you command this elite corps of brave airmen in a day-by-day simulation of the daylight strategic bombing of Nazi Europe.
The action is broken down into daily decisions and raids. Results are so specific that every single serviceable aircraft is accounted for at the beginning and end of each mission. Even intangible factors such as group morale and experience are assessed daily. A seasonally accurate weather map is provided, with the percentage of cloud cover constantly updated.
You can play either the full-length Campaign Game (which starts on August 1, 1943) or one of three Short Games (which lasts one month). In all scenarios, combat proceeds on a daily basis, with each day's action resolved in ten-minute pulses.

As the American General, you command the 8th Air Force in England and the 15th in Italy to fly daily raids. Twelve types of industrial centers spread across 91 German-occupied cities can be assigned as primary and secondary targets. Bomb such targets as U-boat pens, V-weapon sites, railyards, oil fields, and electric power plants.

You determine the take-off time, altitude, and number and types of groups per mission. Your bomber squadrons boast the legendary B-17 Flying Fortresses and B-24 Liberators. Their fighter escorts include P-38 Lightnings, P-47 Thunderbolts, or P-51 Mustangs. The effectiveness of your mission depends on weather, altitude, and enemy defenses.
As Germany's defender, you direct the Luftwaffe and its Junker, Messerschmitt, and Focke-Wulf interceptors. Defensive efficiency is a must because the Allies can rely on unlimited fuel resources, while you are hampered by a strategic limitation of aviation gas. Attack the enemy with any of five fighter tactics, including plane-launched rockets.

In this advanced simulation, weapons become available to each side at the same times they were actually developed in World War II. However, the Germans can accelerate the availability of new plane types such as the Me-262 jet by converting aircraft factories. Both sides can swap for newer planes to replace older models. The price for advanced technology is loss of time and pilot experience.

Test your combat skills at five levels of play. Challenge a friend, or direct the computer to play either or both sides. The computer handles all the staff work, calculating efficiency ratings, tallying damaged planes, assigning replacements, and allocating fuel.
You are free to do what a general is paid to do- command.
Color Hi-Res graphics show American airbases, German airfields and industrial centers.
Combat is resolved down to individual planes. Here, the computer shows a P-38 group's losses during a dogfight.
German air group status display.
A report of the number of flak units in each Nazi-occupied city.


http://www.mobygames.com/game/c64/usaaf-united-states-army-air-force
